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5 votes
Explain why a geometric series with a ratio between zero and one converges and how you find the sum.

User Catzilla
by
7.7k points

2 Answers

3 votes
Let
S_n be the
nth partial sum of a geometric sequence with common ratio
r and first term
a. So the sequence is
\{a,ar,ar^2,\cdots\}, and
S_n is


S_n=a+ar+ar^2+\cdots+ar^(n-2)+ar^(n-1)

Multiplying both sides by
r gives


rS_n=ar+ar^2+ar^3+\cdots+ar^(n-1)+ar^n

and subtracting
rS_n from
S_n gives


S_n-rS_n=a+(ar-ar)+(ar^2-ar^2)+\cdots+(ar^(n-1)-ar^(n-1))-ar^n

(1-r)S_n=a(1-r^n)

S_n=a(1-r^n)/(1-r)

If
0<r<1, then
r^n\to0 as
n\to\infty and so the sum approaches


\displaystyle\lim_(n\to\infty)S_n=\frac a{1-r}
User Pranta Palit
by
8.0k points
5 votes

Answer:

The formula for the sum is Sn= a1(1/r^n)/(1-r)

A fraction raised to a large power approaches zero.

The sum is a1 divided by the difference of 1 and r.

User Mo Kargas
by
8.2k points

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